2024-03-19T04:12:19Zhttps://repositorio.bde.es/oai/requestoai:repositorio.bde.es:123456789/90582023-06-15T11:42:34Zcom_123456789_21com_123456789_5862com_123456789_5861col_123456789_5901col_123456789_5883
García Perea, Pilar
Román, Concepción
2019-08-14T07:51:32Z
2019-08-14T07:51:32Z
2019-06-18
https://repositorio.bde.es/handle/123456789/9058
000466905
ECBU-2019-2B-art20
In Spain,self-employment currently accounts for 16% of those employed, a proportion slightly higher than the EU average. Compared with the prevailing structure among employees, it is males, the over-50s, those with a low level of educational attainment and those employed in traditional sectors such as agriculture, wholesale and retail trade, transport and accommodation who are over-represented in this group. Relative to self-employed workers in the EU, self-employment in Spain accounts for a smaller proportion of the total in the liberal professions in services, generally associated with a higher level of skill. In Spain, the incidence of self-employment economically dependent on a single client is relatively moderate compared with other European countries
but the high incidence of the self-employed who choose to work as such out of necessity, given the lack of alternatives, is notable. Lastly, in all euro area countries, households with a self-employed family head are seen to be wealthier than those with a wage-earning family head, and Spain is in an intermediate position
eng
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Self-employment
Sole proprietor
Employer
Economía de la Unión Europea
Mercado de trabajo
Characterisation of self-employment in Spain from a European perspective
Artículo